Multivision Deal -- Bargain or Scam?

by David Boldt
(Santa Cruz (Urubo))

Anyone experienced in dealing with Multivision? I went there today to apply for service, and a woman (who will never be nominated for Miss Congeniality) quoted a price and listed the documents I needed. On leaving and heading for my car another woman approached me and said she was a ''promotor'' for Multivision and outlined a much better deal with several months of free service. She gave me the same flyer I received inside except it had ''Multivision Tiempo'' and her phone number stamped and/or written on it. I'm hoping someone knows whether this is a wacky Bolivian marketing ploy or some kind of scam.

Comments for Multivision Deal -- Bargain or Scam?

Can't be much help. Finally, unable to learn anything definitive about the alternative installer, we just dealt with Multivision and took the standard deal. Works fine.

Sep 13, 2013

Multivision Offerby: Anonymous

I am curious to see how this panned out. I have also been given an offer to work/train with this company. I was asked a couple of basic C# questions around OOP concepts and one SQL question. I am weary of the contract they sent me to sign. It almost seems to good to be true. I was just wondering what ever happened with this??

Apr 01, 2012

Good idea, but . . . .by: David Boldt

The problem is that the flyer the ''promotor'' gave me did not state the particulars of the deal offered. Also, I was in a rush at the time. Also, I had been put off by the almost hostile treatment I had received. But when I go back I will present the flyer from the promotor and ask if she is what she claimed.

Apr 01, 2012

Ask Multivisionby: Anonymous

Why don't you take the flyer into the Multivision office and ask them. You shouldn't take the risk without asking first.